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Camera

A camera is a device that records images by projecting light through a lens onto a photosensitive surface. In traditional cameras the surface is photographic film; in modern cameras it is an electronic image sensor such as a CCD or CMOS chip, which converts light into electrical signals that are processed and stored as digital files. The basic light-tight body contains a shutter that controls exposure and a lens that determines focus and field of view.

Photography relies on the exposure triangle: aperture controls the amount of light and depth of field, shutter

Camera types range from compact point-and-shoot models to interchangeable-lens cameras, including digital single-lens reflex cameras (DSLRs)

Beyond consumer use, cameras play a central role in journalism, science, industry, and art, documenting events,

speed
fixes
how
long
light
reaches
the
sensor,
and
ISO
defines
the
sensor's
sensitivity.
Lenses
vary
in
focal
length,
affecting
magnification
and
perspective.
Modern
cameras
typically
include
autofocus,
exposure
metering,
white
balance,
and
in
many
cases
in-body
or
lens-based
stabilization.
Images
are
stored
on
removable
media
as
RAW
or
JPEG
files,
with
RAW
preserving
more
image
data
for
post-processing.
and
mirrorless
interchangeable-lens
cameras,
as
well
as
medium-format
systems.
Earlier
cameras
used
film
and
chemically
developed
images;
today
most
consumer
cameras
are
digital,
and
many
smartphones
incorporate
advanced
camera
hardware
and
computational
photography
features.
environments,
and
subjects.
They
continue
to
evolve
with
sensor
advancements,
artificial
intelligence,
and
increasingly
compact
form
factors.